It's not a belief that there is a need to be schizophrenic if you're a scientist and at the same time be a religious believer, it's just a sensible/reasonable conclusion that of course can be challenged any time.
And I have often challenged the belief, ippy, without any sensible response from the nlikes of yourself.
There is no dichotomy, science is based on logic/reason, any kind of religion you might like to name isn't.
Again, the 'dichotomy' is between two ideas that don't very often deal with the same aspects of life. I know that some like to try to get them to do so, but that is a minority.
You've said some terrible things about, gay people on this forum,
I'd agree that I have made some pretty tough comments about homosexuality, into which people like you have read some 'terrible things about, gay people'. That's your prerogative. As for "what are your own views if you had the strength of character to disregard that so obviously man made bronze age manual you so sheepishly follow"; they'd be the same sinvce the majority of my views have nothing to do with your so-called 'bronze-age manual'. 'So-called' because the New Testament records events dating from some 1200 years after the Bronze Age came to an end in the Near East, and 600-odd after it came to an end in Europe.
Have a look at that Win/Gallup Atheism poll figures on how many scientists are believers the figures tell all.
The more educated people are bears a direct relation to the falling away of primitive beliefs like your religious belief, ...
ippy, in whiuch sense are the people 'more educated'? Does it refer to the number of people who have qualifications in scientific disciplines, or does it refer to people who have a better understanding and practise of human relationships? Clearly, with the number of people determined to drive a wedge between religion and science on the scientific side, the former will inevitably indicate that the number of religious people is falling. If you use the latter explanation, you may well not get the same correlation.
Like I said it's not a belief that a christian or holder of any other belief has to be split, on the one hand there are religious beliefs as opposed to clear analytical thought without the handicap of superstitious clutter.
Reasoned logic is just that; what other way is there to reason other than using reason and logic?
Your manual started off in the bronze age and obviously things didn't move on much between whenever it is you would like to date additions to that book where more magic, myth and more pursuance of superstition was added, since it's no longer relevant, other than it is a part of our common history; why is there any need for that lot where science is concerned?
Just put in Win/Gallup Atheism poll, it soon comes up then you can look at the figures for yourself without anything from my direction, please feel free to make up your own mind about the figures they are presenting.
Psychology used to be a B A degree or something like that it now comes as a BSC a science degree that being so where is there any need for religion in any of the science based reasonings if we did need religion there surly there must be a place for Tarot and other things like Astrology too.
The way I see it is that there is no wedge as you call it between science and religion, science can do all of the reasoning they can manage to do without a need for superstitions of any kind, call them what you like religions superstitions, unexplained magic tricks etc, in fact science is more likely to prove or disprove these things more than anything else is likely to.
ippy